Changing your look every season to please a fickle customer isn’t how I work. I aim to create heirlooms that a woman can pass down.
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>From Jeremy Scott's ongoing adidas collaboration. (Sam Deng)
Tuesday - March 15, 2016 Tue - 03/15/16
 
 
rantnrave:// One day, two NEW YORKER profiles of two very different designers: JEREMY SCOTT, the clown prince of bombastic, microwaved kitsch, and the virtuosic GUO PEI, CHINA's first homegrown couturière. While SCOTT is a divisive but familiar figure, PEI is a relative unknown in the west, notable mainly for designing the showstopper RIHANNA wore to last year's MET BALL. Her ascent has been slow and steady, and now that she's arrived, she's struggling with scale. In order to broaden her client base, she'll need to expand into ready-to-wear, and necessarily sacrifice some of her superior craftsmanship. Says PEI: "I want to make clothes that sell in order to finance clothes that don’t sell but which speak to my soul.” She won't be the first designer to play that game. One who doesn't have to, though? JEREMY SCOTT. Say what you will about SCOTT's work -- tacky, tasteless, vulgar -- it sells, and it all speaks to, or emanates from, SCOTT's soul... All of it except for the bits SCOTT has ripped off, that is, which LIZZIE WIDDICOMBE's profile fails to mention. SCOTT has a history of plagiarism, detailed by ELLIE SHECHET at JEZEBEL... Horse in a suit? Horse in a suit... Note to editors: a third of today's stories have titles beginning with 'how.' New verb, please!
- Adam Wray, curator
kansas city
The New Yorker
The Empire's New Clothes
by Judith Thurman
China’s rich have their first homegrown haute couturier.
The New Yorker
Barbie Boy: How Jeremy Scott remade Moschino for the Instagram era.
by Lizzie Widdicombe
Racked
The Last Lifestyle Magazine
by Kyle Chayka
How "Kinfolk" created the dominant aesthetic of the decade with perfect lattes and avocado toast.
Business of Fashion
The Copycat Economy
by Helena Pike
Do knockoffs harm the fashion business? Or does copying keep the wheels of the industry turning?
Wired
I Watched Amazon's Live Fashion Show So You Don’t Have To
by Davey Alba
Three 30-somethings lip-sync their hearts out. Then we cut to them in a studio joking playfully with each other. A voiceover informs us that we're about to see outfits everyone will be rocking this spring. Another cut.
Fashionista
Meet VillageLuxe, the Rental Site That Aims to Be Airbnb for Your Closet
by Alyssa Vingan Klein
Early last year, the fashion crowd latched onto the teachings of a young woman named Marie Kondo. Her best-selling book, " The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing," caused an epidemic of manic closet cleaning and wardrobe simplifying, as the author instructs her readers to rid themselves of anything that doesn't "spark joy."
High Snobiety
How Did Gosha Rubchinskiy Become So Big, So Quick?
by Calum Gordon
There are few designers who have captured the attention of the fashion world in recent years quite like Gosha Rubchinskiy. Buyers, journalists, consumers and casual onlookers have all been swept along by the Russian designer's post-Soviet streetwear vision, and each of his collections is met with anticipation and adoration from many corners of the fashion world.
The Telegraph
How did a £185 DHL T-shirt become fashion's latest cult item?
by Lisa Armstrong
The three most cultish trophies of the moment sound ludicrous, possibly because, even by the most lenient criteria, they are. However cults have become an important component in fashion. Never mind trends, which waft around on a permanent wash cycle.
The New York Times
When Fashion Meets Technology, You Can Wear Your Tweets
by Hilarie M. Sheets
The Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen, in her 2010 collection "Crystallization," was the first person to send a 3-D-printed haute couture garment down the runway. A top assembled from nine scalloped, shell-like sections cantilevered over the model's shoulders and chest like a futuristic shield.
The Independent
How designer headphones became a fashion status symbol
by Alexander Fury
The most sought-after sets are beautiful, hugely expensive, and sound pretty good too, says Alexander Fury.
beijing
ADWEEK
How American Apparel Is Rebuilding Its Brand With More Sizes, New Styles and Fresh Marketing
by Kristina Monllos
Brand exec Cynthia Erland lays out the strategy.
The Guardian
How 'La Haine' predicted streetwear fashion
by Morwenna Ferrier
A lesson in antihero fashion, the film’s multiple styles are more resonant today than ever before.
artnet
5 Things To Know About Isaac Mizrahi in Advance of His Jewish Museum Exhibition
by Cait Munro
If you're planning on seeing " Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History," which opens to the public at the Jewish Museum on March 18 and runs though August 7, there's a few things about the seminal fashion designer you may want to know.
Fashionista
The 20 Most Influential Personal Style Bloggers: 2016 Edition
by Lauren Indvik
Meet the digital influencers launching clothing lines, landing magazine covers and running multimillion-dollar businesses -- all stemming from their personal style blogs.
Mashable
Balenciaga's latest It-bag looks a lot like Thailand's humble shopping tote
by Alicia Tan
In 2006, the house of Louis Vuitton found itself in the news for the wrong reasons when then creative director Marc Jacobs sent models out on the runway toting a checked shopping bag that resembled the Chinese migrant worker's travel tote.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
via YouTube.
"I Always Get Caught In The Rain"
Dionne Warwick
 
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